Activation of the c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) by a variety of stimuli is critical for regulation of many cellular processes including apoptosis. The major inducible heat shock protein Hsp72 has previously been demonstrated to inhibit activation of JNK in cells exposed to heat shock and other protein-damaging agents, thus suppressing apoptosis. Hsp72 can protect proteins from stress-induced damage. To test if this protective function of Hsp72 is involved in JNK suppression, we investigated whether Hsp72 can avert activation of JNK by stimuli that do not cause protein damage. We show that Hsp72 suppresses activation of JNK induced by non-protein-damaging stimuli, interleukin-1 and UV irradiation, as well as by constitutively active components of the JNK signaling cascade Cdc42 and MEKK1. Furthermore, Hsp72 strongly reduced activation of JNK by phosphatase inhibitors. We also demonstrate that an Hsp72 mutant that lacks the ATPase domain is still capable of JNK suppression, thus indicating that the protein refolding activity of Hsp72 is not critical for inhibition of JNK activation. Taken together these data suggest that Hsp72 plays a regulatory role in JNK signaling and that the function of Hsp72 in protein protection or refolding is not involved in JNK regulation.